Florida State's offense under head coach Jimbo Fisher has been described as complex since he took over the offensive coordinator position in 2007.

But Fisher disputed that statement during his weekly call-in show on Wednesday night.

“A corner route when a guy plays you low, you run it high," Fisher said.

"When he’s high you run it low. That’s in every offense in football. If you you’ve got an out route and it’s pressed it converts to a go route. Every day in football. We’re just playing with some inexperienced guys at times."

The FSU offense has struggled mightily this season averaging just 18.4 points per game, which is 122nd in college football out of 130 teams.

The Seminoles are 127th in touchdowns scored with just 17 on the season. That is last among all Power-5 teams and only ahead of Georgia Southern, Kent State, and UTEP.

FSU quarterback Deondre Francois stated earlier this season that the playbook is very complex, and he understood why true freshman quarterback James Blackman has struggled at times.

"Very difficult for anybody," Francois said.

"Coming from high school and coming into a playbook, very complex, diverse playbook, it’s going to be difficult for any player."

Fisher did acknowledge that the offense can get more complicated when the players who are running it know what they're doing.

He specifically mentioned former Heisman Trophy award winner Jameis Winston as a player that could handle the complexity.

"You can make it as complex as you want it," Fisher said.

"You can make it extremely complex. We’re not any more. With Jameis we did some things that were very complex, because he could handle those things. We don’t do a lot of those things when guys are young like that."

But as far as the offense overall, Fisher says he's been running the same offense since he started coaching.

And he said it is very similar to other programs around the country.

"It’s the same offense that I’ve ran since 1993 or 1994," Fisher said.

"It’s about three fourths of the old coach Bowden offense that I grew up in. That’s been here forever and ever and ever and ever. The philosophies and the base concepts. If you go to Alabama, they still call all their stuff that I called at LSU. It’s still the same plays. At Georgia and different places. It’s extremely similar to that."